View Single Post
Old 10th August 2020, 09:22 AM   #12
A. G. Maisey
Member
 
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 6,676
Default

The identification of the characters shown in keris hilts is very dangerous ground to be too certain on.

The characters shown as hilt figures in Balinese hilts are usually interpretations of either local Balinese folk figures or wayang characters, especially characters from the Ramayana. However, the way in which the craftsmen who carve these representations very often will defy giving any figure a specific identity.

There are a great many characters in the Ramayana & the Mahabharata, and a great many more Balinese folk, legendary & mythical characters. The hilt character is put in place as the guardian of the shrine that is the keris, so this sort of narrows the field a bit --- or does it? Somebody might form the opinion that he wants the baddest bloke in town to guard his keris because that Ravana is going to scare away any evil entity that wants to come along and wants to inhabit his keris.

On the other hand he might figure that it is best to put Ganesha in place as the guard because of his incredibly powerful martial abilities. But Ganesha and just about all the characters used as subjects for Balinese carvings, pura figures, gateway figures, as well as hilt figures, should have very definite attributes that will tell people, as well as the evil entities from the Niskala exactly who they are. Sometimes the formal pura figures will have these attributes, but the less formal hilt figures will not, especially hilt figures that have been carved in recent times.

Sometimes a craftsman will produce something that is pure art and does not display any attribute that can be associated with a genuine character at all. Other times a client might instruct the craftsman to produce a particular figure, for example an elephant headed figure, that is meant to represent an iconic historic figure, say, Gajah Mada, or even the client's own grandfather who held Ganesha as his personal deity.

If we see a hilt that shows a monkey-like figure it is almost invariably identified as Hanuman --- but was it intended as Hanuman by the carver? There is more than one monkey character in the Ramayana, Sugriwa for example.

Then we have the propensity of Balinese carvers to haphazardly mix attributes. The punakawan Petruk for example ---the gentleman with the big, long, nose. Petruk has an attribute that consists of a bell that he wears around his neck, that bell should always have the clapper visible, the reason being that a bell & clapper is a phallic symbol, and Petruk's nose is popularly interpreted as a phallic attribute.

Now Jean has shown us a hilt that it seems a Javanese expert has identified as Jatayu, and that Jatayu figure has Petruk's attribute around his neck, and a punakawan's topknot , but it cannot be Petruk because Petruk is tall, skinny, bony and with a big, long nose. So, is it Jatayu? Well, Jatayu is one of the good guys in the Ramayana, one might call him a role model, he was one of the Garudas but he could speak in a human voice and some say he could assume human form. So --- Jatayu? Or has the carver drunk too much tuak for lunch and forgotten which character should have a bell around his neck?

In the "Bali Bersejarah" book that was produced a few years ago, the man who produced it, and who is an acknowledged authority on Balinese art very often does not identify the hilt figures in the book he produced, these unidentified figures get given generic names, such as "Royal Figure" or similar.

The bottom line is this:-
Balinese totogan hilts are often not accurate representations of any specific figure, and are sometimes not intended to be. If we wish to know exactly what figure a Balinese totogan hilt is supposed to represent, we need to go and ask the carver, or in some cases, the person who commissioned it. Mostly this is not possible.
A. G. Maisey is online now   Reply With Quote